Leading away from a King in a suit contract
#1
Posted 2016-October-03, 08:30
Bernard Magee says: DON’T LEAD AWAY FROM A KING AGAINST A SUIT CONTRACT.A lead away from any high honour against a suit contract is very risky, but
leading away from a king is especially dangerous, except if your partner has bid that suit.
These statements don't necessarily contradict one another. In what circumstances is it good or bad to lead away from a King with K754 defending a suit contract?
#2
Posted 2016-October-03, 09:26
Sorry, that wasn't so helpful Maybe more to the point:
If the auction suggests that declarer is weak in the suit then it is relatively safe and often necesarry to lead the suit. This can be the case if they seem to have explored 3NT but ended up in 3m (or 4M in what looks like a 7-card fit) because of a lack of stop in that suit. Also, if declarer has preempted it is relative safe as he tends not to have much outside trumps. Basically, you are hoping that he doesn't have the Ace and/or the Queen (unless partner has the other of those two cards).
It can also be good to lead from Kxx or even Kx if dummy has bid that suit - declarer might think you are leading a singleton and refrain from taking the finesse. If you don't lead the suit, he will probably draw trumps and take the finesse afterwards.
Note that this is less likely to work when you have Kxxx or longer as declarer will often be able to figure out that your lead isn't a singleton.
It also depends how much you think partner has in terms of honours. If you add your points to what declarer and dummy have shown and get a result close to 40, then you should not underlead an honour since partner won't have the supporting honour which you need (except when attempting the above mentioned sneeky plot).
Underleading a king is an "aggressive" lead - it can easily cost a trick and easily gain a trick. At teams, you should do it when declarer seems to be in a comfortable contract and it requires some luck to get it down. Do not do it if they have stretched or things seem to break badly for them. At pairs, it is more difficult to say, but the general advice is to be more hesistant with aggresive leads at pairs when declarer seems to be in a normal contract.
#3
Posted 2016-October-03, 09:27
#4
Posted 2016-October-03, 09:37
wank, on 2016-October-03, 09:27, said:
I believe Tony Forrester has been quotes as saying that he never leads from kings. Oviously these sweeping statements should be taken with a pinch of salt - sometimes leading from a king is indicated particularly slams. I would say that based on personal experience I would say that it is at least as bad as leading from a queen but better than leading from the jack (on average).
#5
Posted 2016-October-03, 09:54
Here is an instance where not leading away from your king is a dreadful mistake. You know from the bidding that declarer is likely to draw trump and run the diamond suit, and you must aggressively set up and get whatever tricks you having coming to you. It is unlikely that you have cost anything even if you have led into the H-AQ as declarer's heart losers are likely to go on dummy's dimaonds anyway, and it's unlikely that you can both get partner in and score your HK. I think your best chance to defeat 4S is to hope partner has something like H-QJ or Q10, C-A, D-K and that the hearts will all cash. Yes, partner could have C-AK D-K but that only helps if the weaker responder is the player with the HA.
Leading from a king is a bit dangerous blind but not nearly as dangerous as Mr. Magee allegedly points out. Unless you have length in the suit, the chances of you losing your king totally when you would have scored it aren't that great. And in an auction where there are two bid (or shown) suits and I don't have their side suit well stopped, I usually want to lead an unbid suit. Leading from Kxx is certainly preferable to Axx, and usually preferable to leading from Qxx or Jxx where it is more likely that your honor that might have taken a trick no longer will.
EDIT: I am aware that partner's hoped for DK in my initial example will probably be singleton, but declarer will lose it. More likely, partner's card to get in will be the SA or the offside SK.
#7
Posted 2016-October-03, 10:16
#8
Posted 2016-October-03, 10:19
johnu, on 2016-October-03, 10:05, said:
If you don't lead from a king, what do you lead?
I would probably lead trumps. Even if dummy scores the first trick with the queen, your king is still there if declarer has the ace of trumps. If you lead a side suit (and dummy holds the queen / declarer holds the ace) you will often find that the third round is ruffed and your king is lost.
#10
Posted 2016-October-03, 11:06
Phil, on 2016-October-03, 10:36, said:
On the other hand, Eddie Kantar's material is in most cases excellent. While he likes those 10's and 9's leads that I also like but only if my opponents play them, in most cases what he says is correct. That comes with a caveat. He has lesson deals where he wants you to play some impossible contract, and the bidding he uses to reach that contract is often eccentric. I don't think he condones the bidding (he often says something like "You reached 6H and it's partner's fault") so if you see one of his lesson deals with bidding you think is strange, it's likely that he thinks it is strange also.
#11
Posted 2016-October-03, 14:25
#12
Posted 2016-October-03, 19:07
broze, on 2016-October-03, 09:37, said:
as does david gold. it's totally an english thing. i don't like leading away from kings. i also don't like leading from aces. still, if i think the bidding calls for it i'll do either. a blanket approach is clearly excessive.
#13
Posted 2016-October-04, 02:37
ochinko, on 2016-October-03, 14:25, said:
Yes but I think the arguments against leading an unsupported king outweigh this. If partner has the ace, leading the king can sometimes establish the queen for declarer. It also works poorly if partner has a stiff honour, or if declarer or dummy has a stiff ace. Of course it is great if declarer/dummy has the stiff queen.
#14
Posted 2016-October-04, 12:17
At NT:
Here the only real decision is whether to (i) try to establish your suit; (ii) try to establish partner's suit; or (iii) play passively
Generally you lead fourth best from your best suit, but there are two exceptions:
1. If your hand is very weak, you should consider leading what you think might be partner's suit
2. If the opponents have crawled into game and you have a balanced hand (no 5-carder), consider defending passively
The particular strategy you elect to follow will dictate your lead, not whether you have Kxxx or Kxxxx somewhere.
At a suit contract, it's much the same story. The most important thing to do is to select your strategy. There are four main strategies on opening lead:
1. Establish / take tricks for your side
2. Set up a ruff for your side
3. Cut down on declarer's ruffing
4. Defend passively
Often, you'll have an obvious lead. If you have AK or KQJ or QJT somewhere, or if partner has opened 1M or overcalled, your troubles are generally over. But sometimes, you'll have to think, and here again, you have to use the bidding to decide what the best strategy will be.
#1 is appropriate where you think the dummy will have an outside source of tricks. #2 is good if you have a singleton, especially if you have trump control and even more so if you also have a way to reach partner. #3 calls for a trump lead; there are certain auctions that hint that declarer will try to ruff loses in the dummy (especially true if you are strong in declarer's first suit and the opponents end up in declarer's second suit instead). #4 works well if dummy is expected to have neither useful length nor useful shortness (you don't want to kick tricks on lead).
Determining which strategy you need to use will tell you whether it's safe to lead from a King or not. If #1 is called for, by all means lead away from a King. You'll hope partner has the A or at least the Q to set up a trick or two for the good guys. If the opposition has the A and Q between them and dummy has a long, strong side suit, you weren't going to score your K, anyway.
Alternatively, if you think #4 is called for, don't lead from a King if you can avoid it. This is especially true at MPs, where overtricks are key.
Everyone -- even the world champions -- sometimes makes opening leads that don't work out so well. But if you focus more on what the strategy should be, given the bidding, you'll have decent success coming up with a reasonable lead.
#15
Posted 2016-October-04, 12:39
Step 1 : Do we play for MPs or IMPs ? In MP play it is imported that the lead doesn’t give a unnecessary overtrick. In MP play you try to find the lead which will give the best chance to set a contract and you don’t worry about overtricks.
Step 2 : Is your hand better, about the same or worse than your partner ? This is important to make a choice between leading your own strength or to try to find your partner.
Step 3 : Which suits do you not lead ? These are the suits which would be helpful for opponents. This will increase the chance to find the best suit.
Step 4 : Which of the remaining suits are we going to lead ? For this decision step 1 and 2 are taken into account.
Step 5 : Which card do you lead from the suit ? For this decision step 2 is the most imported clue.
If following these steps means you have to lead trump and or under lead a ace, king or queen so be it and don’t worry if it was wrong just analyze it with your partner if he agrees for the reasons why you lead that suit and build on your leading skills.
A tip for analyzing a board (for whatever decision during the game) is to wait for the session to be over you cannot chance the result and it will break the concentration you need for the remaining boards.
#16
Posted 2016-October-04, 12:56
Obviously in real bridge, circumstances dictate action, and indeed a lead from a king may be the best or worst depending on the situation.
Also,
ochinko, on 2016-October-03, 14:25, said:
This is bizarre. If partner has the ace, then your side will hold the lead a trick 2 either way, and there is no reason to suppose that partner's dilemma at trick 2 will be any worse than your own. Never mind the layouts where leading the king loses tricks outright, removes a guess, etc.
-gwnn
#17
Posted 2016-October-04, 13:36
Tramticket, on 2016-October-03, 10:19, said:
Still, that's leading away from a king which is against the "rules". Proper etiquette would be to
1) Concede all the tricks so you don't break this rule.
2) Lead a king, preferable the king of trump. This doesn't break a rule and I can confirm that I am terrified whenever GIB leads a singleton trump king into my AQ so I would be even more scared from K(x)(x)(x).
#18
Posted 2016-October-04, 13:49